the vatican investigated. it was like wikileaks in the united states. they had no idea who was getting these papers. it was the man serving the pope breakfast, who was stealing the papers. >> for 20 years, his loyalty to the papacy. >> he also stole a check for up with for euros. he's got the pope's check, a nugget of gold, a historic manuscript that must have been worth $1 million at least. the bottom line, he claims he was trying to help in a misguided way. >> a lot of the papers became public documents so not, i guess some of what you think would be secret is public material anyway. but did the vatican feel like they were in any way harmed by the publishing of some of the documents or papers? >> they were. i mean, think about all of the scandals around the catholic church in years. here's a whole other one, instead of coming from some unknown source, these are documents with the pope's own stamp on them. there was no question about the authenticity of the documents. here's one of the interesting things. the vatican launched an investigation, cardinal